Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6606936 | Electrochimica Acta | 2016 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Nanoporous multinary alloy networks containing multiple functional components, i. e. active Li-alloying main-group metals and inactive transition-metals, possess unique structural and compositional features toward lithium storage, and are thus anticipated to manifest desirable anodic performance in advanced lithium-ion batteries (LIBs). Herein, a general and scalable one-pot hydrogel-derived route has been developed for the construction of nanoporous multinary alloy networks via facile coordination-reduction processes using novel cyano-bridged coordination polymer hydrogels (cyanogels) as precursors. The formation of nanoporous Sn-In-Ni ternary alloy network has been illustrated as an example by using a Sn(IV)-In(III)-Ni(II)-Co(III) quaternary metallic cyanogel as a precursor. Meanwhile, nanoporous Sn-Ni binary alloy and metallic In networks have also been synthesized through coordination-reduction routes using Sn(IV)-Ni(II) and In(III)-Co(III) cyanogels as precursors, respectively. Moreover, the anodic performance of the nanoporous Sn-In-Ni ternary alloy network has been examined as a proof-of-concept demonstration of its structural and compositional superiorities toward lithium storage. Compared with separate Sn-Ni and In networks, the Sn-In-Ni ternary alloy network manifests markedly enhanced lithium-storage performance in terms of reversible capacities, cycling stability, and so forth, making it an ideal anodic candidate for advanced LIBs with long cycle life and high energy/power densities. Moreover, the proposed hydrogel-derived coordination-reduction strategy would open up new opportunities for constructing nanoporous multinary alloy networks as advanced anodes for LIBs.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Chemical Engineering (General)
Authors
Xuguang Chen, Weiyu Zhang, Tonghua Liu, Yiming Zhou, Yawen Tang, Ping Wu,